A first look at Taya Kyle's 'Wife' book jacket

What's new on USA TODAY's Best-Selling Books list and in publishing...

Taya's turn: As American Sniper continues its box-office domination (more than $250 million and counting), Chris Kyle's 2012 memoir repeats in the No. 1 spot on USA TODAY's list for the third week in a row. (The full list will publish on Thursday.) The huge success of the movie and book bode well for his widow Taya Kyle's own memoir: American Wife: A Memoir of Love, Service, Faith, and Renewal, due from William Morrow on May 5. The jacket is seen here for the first time. Taya (Sienna Miller in the movie) writes of her marriage and her grief after Kyle, a former Navy SEAL, was murdered in 2013 at a Texas gun range, allegedly by former Marine Eddie Ray Routh. "I was madly in love with (Chris) and still am," Taya tells People magazine in a cover interview.

Speeding 'Train': Paula Hawkins is having a good American road trip. The English author of the hit debut psychological thriller The Girl on the Train (which repeats at No. 2 for the third straight week) has been on a U.S. book tour and drawing standing-room only crowds at stores like Houston's Murder by the Book, according to publisher Riverhead. On Monday she will appear on CBS This Morning. Riverhead reports more than a half million copies in print (up from a first printing of 40,000). Data from USA TODAY's list shows the Train e-book outselling the hardcover. Movie rights have been sold to DreamWorks.

'Bird' flies: With the news that a new Harper Lee novel will be published in July, her 55-year-old classic To Kill a Mockingbird will get a boost, too. The day after the announcement about Go Set a Watchman, a sequel written in the 1950s, Mockingbird had climbed to No. 2 on Amazon. The book has a long history on USA TODAY's list, which began in 1993. It has spent 870 weeks on the list and been as high as No. 10, in July 2010, during its 50th anniversary year. The classic Southern novel also saw a boost last summer, when the e-book version was published for the first time. It's a summertime favorite for schoolkids and a classroom staple. It's No. 51 this week, but is sure to rise on USA TODAY's list next week.